Promontory fort - coastal, Ballard, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Forts
On the Atlantic edge of County Clare, somewhere along the ragged coastline near Ballard, the remains of a promontory fort cling to the geography in the way that only Iron Age builders seemed to understand.
A promontory fort is exactly what it sounds like: a defensive enclosure built across the neck of a sea cliff headland, using the sheer drop to the water on three sides as a natural barrier, with a constructed earthwork or stone rampart closing off the landward approach. The sea did most of the defensive work; the builders simply sealed the gap. It is an elegantly minimal solution to the problem of staying alive, and the Clare coastline, fractured and dramatic as it is, offered its early inhabitants no shortage of suitable headlands to choose from.
These coastal forts are found all around the Irish seaboard, and their dates of construction and use span a broad range, though many are associated with the Iron Age and early medieval periods. Who exactly occupied the Ballard example, under what circumstances, and for how long, remains unclear from what has so far come to light. The site sits within a county that preserves an extraordinary density of early monuments, from the limestone pavements of the Burren with their wedge tombs and ring forts, to the tidal and cliff-edge structures that punctuate the shore. A coastal promontory fort in this landscape is neither surprising nor incidental; it belongs to a long pattern of communities reading the terrain and building into it with purpose.